Small boat first tsunami debris to reach California

A 20-foot boat that washed ashore this month in northern California has been confirmed as the first debris from the 2011 Japanese tsunami to reach the state.

A 20-foot boat that washed ashore this month in northern California has been confirmed as the first debris from the 2011 Japanese tsunami to reach the state.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, working with the Japanese Consulate in San Francisco, was able to confirm on Thursday that the boat found on April 7 in Crescent City was from Rikuzentakata, Japan, said agency spokeswoman Keeley Belva.

Local authorities reported the boat to NOAA after it was discovered by beachgoers, Belva said. It is the 27th confirmed piece of debris to reach the U.S. coast, she said.

Although official confirmation came on Thursday, Facebook helped make the connection earlier.

After characters on the side of the barnacle-covered boat were roughly translated to say "Takata High School" - a school in Rikuzentakata - a Humboldt State University professor tracked down the Japanese city's Facebook page and posted photos of the skiff, the Times-Standard newspaper reported.

A teacher quickly was able to confirm the boat belonged to the school, which the newspaper said lost students and instructors and was destroyed by the tsunami.

A Rikuzentakata spokeswoman told the newspaper that the city was "giddy" to hear the boat had been found.

"Just to know it made it, just to know it made it across the Pacific, that's just one of these things in life that no one is prepared for - but in the best possible way," Amya Miller said. "That something made it across the ocean is beautiful. It's absolutely beautiful."

The Japanese government guesses the magnitude 9 earthquake and subsequent tsunami - which killed thousands and devastated the northern part of the country - swept somewhere around 5 million tons of debris into the Pacific Ocean, NOAA said.

Other pieces have reached the U.S. coast, including a 65-foot-long dock found in central Oregon last year.